Former model and young son die in plunge from New York hotel

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A 47-year-old former model and her 7-year-old son plunged to their deaths in what the New York Police Department has deemed a murder-suicide. The two were found unconscious after a fall from a New York hotel Friday.

New York police found the bodies of Stephanie Nicolai and her 7-year-old son, Vincent, on a second-floor balcony of the Gotham Hotel, where they were guests, police said. The NYPD has determined that the mother’s death was a suicide, and the son’s death was a homicide.

The bodies were discovered about 8:15 a.m. Friday after a 911 call about an unconscious woman and child at the 25-story boutique hotel on East 46th Street, according to police.

Detectives are investigating the case and trying to determine a motive. Authorities are examining video from the area and speaking with people who knew the woman.

“I said in the middle of a divorce case, you just can’t do that,” he said.

But the lawyer who’d represented her for about a month said he’d talked with her extensively, even on the night before she died, and “there was no indication whatsoever” that she might take her own life.

“We were talking about the broad strategies for her divorce,” attorney Daniel Kron told CNN Saturday.

Kron, who referred to his client as Stephanie Adams, said “there’s a certain amount of stress” in divorce proceedings but “she seemed to be dealing with them quite well.”

“She was in my office almost every day,” he said. “She was a very professional, high-class, thoughtful and considerate individual.”

“It is inexplicable to me that this happened. I cannot think of how the Stephanie I knew got to this point.”

Attorney: Father is distraught

William Beslow, the attorney representing the child’s father, Charles Nicolai, told CNN his client believed his estranged wife was going to remove the boy from the country.

He said a court this week ordered the mother to turn over Vincent’s passport to a lawyer appointed to represent him.

“He’s in mourning,” Beslow said of his client. “He’s distraught. The centerpiece of his life was his son. … This guy is sweet, decent and caring.”

Nicolai, who used her maiden name — Stephanie Adams — on her website, described herself as a former model who attended Fairleigh Dickinson University.

She was a fashion model, Playboy magazine’s Miss November 1992, an LGBT activist and wrote “a series of astrology, new age, spiritual and metaphysical books,” according to the website.

“She was cheerful any time I saw her — polite, dignified,” Felder said. “The boy was beautiful. Her whole life revolved around that child. She would bring him to the office. He was just a lovely little child. He used to love Spider-Man and the girls would fawn over him in the office and color with him.”